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I wanted to do something on this but my draft takes were getting too long even for me to stand. Tyler Cowen rescues me by providing the proper foil. The core issue is that interests are still high in Spain, Portugal, Greece, etc even as the ECB base rates and consumer rates fall in France and Germany. Tyler's take

Would the new helicopter drop money be kept in periphery banks and lent out to stimulate business investment? Or does the new money flee say Portugal because Portuguese banks are not safe enough, Portuguese loans are not lucrative and safe enough, and Portuguese mattresses are too cumbersome?

The former scenario implies that monetary policy should be potent. The latter scenario implies that the helicopter drop will be for naught and the fiscal policy multiplier also will be low, on the upside at the very least (fiscal cuts still might cause a lot of damage on the downside). I call this the liquidity leak, rather than the liquidity trap.

To stake out a simplistic but perhaps more concise position than my true one, I say this. What Tyler calls a liquidity leak, I call markets at work. The ECB provides enough stimulus to get all of the Eurozone going but it all leaks to Germany. Fine. The German market heats up. German wages and rents rise. Retired German doctors start considering the virtues of a flat in Lisbon overlooking the harbor. German consultancies hold seminars on "How to make your Mediterranean town competitive in the new German Outsourcing Model."

This is the way things are supposed to work. The idea that a more competitive and efficient Germany should not command higher wages and rents is bizarre; and is only called inflation because the Eurozone, in its heart-of-hearts, doesn't actually believe its one monetary union where the richer parts are distinguished principally by the fact that they have more money.